Filipino Home Care Workers: Invisible Frontline Workers in the COVID-19 Crisis in the United States

Author:

Nasol Katherine1,Francisco-Menchavez Valerie2

Affiliation:

1. University of California Davis, Davis, CA, USA

2. San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA, USA

Abstract

Filipino home care workers are at the frontlines of assisted living facilities and residential care facilities for the elderly (RCFEs), yet their work has largely been unseen. We attribute this invisibility to the existing elder care crisis in the United States, further exacerbated by COVID-19. Based on quantitative and qualitative data with Filipino workers before and during the COVID-19 crisis, we find that RCFEs have failed to comply with labor standards long before the pandemic where the lack of state regulation denied health and safety protections for home care workers. The racial inequities under COVID-19 via the neoliberal approach to the crisis puts home care workers at more risk. We come to this analysis through Critical Immigration Studies framing Filipino labor migration as it is produced by neoliberalism and Racial Capitalist constructs. Last, while the experiences of Filipino home care workers during the pandemic expose the elder care industry’s exploitation, we find that they are also creating strategies to take care of one another.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Social Sciences,Sociology and Political Science,Education,Cultural Studies,Social Psychology

Reference15 articles.

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1. Visualizing the global deployment of Filipina workers;Environment and Planning B: Urban Analytics and City Science;2024-08-30

2. COVID-19 among migrants, refugees, and internally displaced persons: systematic review, meta-analysis and qualitative synthesis of the global empirical literature;eClinicalMedicine;2024-08

3. Bibliography;Unsettled Labors;2024-06-24

4. Notes;Unsettled Labors;2024-06-24

5. Epilogue;Unsettled Labors;2024-06-24

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